Academy of American Poets
View Cart | Log In 
Subscribe | More Info 
Find a Poet or Poem
Advanced Search >
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Norman Dubie
Norman Dubie
The author of numerous collections of poetry, Norman Dubie is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Bess Hokin Award from the Modern Poetry Association...
More >
Want more poems?
Subscribe to our
Poem-A-Day emails.
FURTHER READING
Poems about Boats and Ships
In Passing
by Stanley Plumly
Old Ironsides
by Oliver Wendell Holmes
Ships That Pass in the Night
by Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Fish
by Linda Bierds
The Owl and the Pussy-Cat
by Edward Lear
Where Go the Boats?
by Robert Louis Stevenson
White Water
by John Montague
Poems about Storms
A Crosstown Breeze
by Henry Taylor
Bermudas
by Andrew Marvell
History of Hurricanes
by Teresa Cader
Low Barometer
by Robert Bridges
Now Winter Nights Enlarge
by Thomas Campion
Sleet
by Alan Shapiro
Stones in the Air
by Anna Journey
Storm Ending
by Jean Toomer
The Day Duke Raised: May 24th, 1974
by Quincy Troupe
The Snow Storm
by Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Storm
by Theodore Roethke
White Water
by John Montague
Poems about Whales
The Feeling of the World As a Bounded Whale Is the Mystical [The child affixes]
by Darcie Dennigan
Sojourn in the Whale
by Marianne Moore
The Drunken Fisherman
by Robert Lowell
Whales Weep Not!
by D. H. Lawrence
World Below the Brine
by Walt Whitman
Sponsor a Poet Page | Add to Notebook | Email to Friend | Print

Of Politics, & Art

 
by Norman Dubie

                                   --for Allen

Here, on the farthest point of the peninsula
The winter storm
Off the Atlantic shook the schoolhouse.
Mrs. Whitimore, dying
Of tuberculosis, said it would be after dark
Before the snowplow and bus would reach us.

She read to us from Melville.

How in an almost calamitous moment
Of sea hunting
Some men in an open boat suddenly found themselves
At the still and protected center
Of a great herd of whales
Where all the females floated on their sides
While their young nursed there. The cold frightened whalers
Just stared into what they allowed
Was the ecstatic lapidary pond of a nursing cow's
One visible eyeball.
And they were at peace with themselves.

Today I listened to a woman say
That Melville might
Be taught in the next decade. Another woman asked, "And why not?"
The first responded, "Because there are
No women in his one novel."

And Mrs. Whitimore was now reading from the Psalms.
Coughing into her handkerchief. Snow above the windows.
There was a blue light on her face, breasts and arms.
Sometimes a whole civilization can be dying
Peacefully in one young woman, in a small heated room
With thirty children
Rapt, confident and listening to the pure
God rendering voice of a storm.






From The Mercy Seat: New and Selected Poems 1967-2000 by Norman Dubie. Copyright © 2000 by Norman Dubie. Reprinted by permission of Copper Canyon Press (www.coppercanyonpress.org). All rights reserved.
Larger TypeLarger Type | Home | Help | Contact Us | Privacy Policy Copyright © 1997 - 2013 by Academy of American Poets.